* "THE TROUT BROOK. Fide Bi44en by tall meadow grass that sways And running through deep, silent pools and under spreading trees; Stef stealing through the quict ways of soli- | Am now beneath a timbered arch where once Aarons the fields and to the brow where val- loys fall awry, : 5 Thi over beds of she ‘ing rook ite waters 2 dance and play, : Aol now and then, ss though in jog of such . Qelighttu] fin, Te ae © 15 agfings into a waterfall that glistens in the 3 ; : And oddies round and round about in strange. Coo fantastico glee, : ; : Thaw shndies down and fiows away wedately © fo the sen. ? . =Frank IL Sweet in 5. Nicholas. - = SKETCHING. "Tis Peuclice Essential to the Suceess of . the Stodent Tu Aft. Originality snd skil’ in inventing or . felling @ story and in expressing the pamdions depen, like evarything else in art, ¢n a painter's powers of observa gin, uod the difference betwoen the ~geaater or less painter results very much, fram thi: —that the first thinks of his art everywhere and at all times, the last in hie painting room only and at set hours. . Hegarth, de-cribing bis own habits, saps: “Be whore Iwenld while my eyes were gpen 1 was. continually at my . stmdiesnd scq ring something useful ‘tommy profession,” and Stoihard’s sketch- bosks were filled v {th groups of figures amd svenery made vvithont selection, bat merely of what chanco offered to his no- tigh while traveliug—sontetines objects © whith the windows of an ion presente _wrisile horses were changing, and some timtes whats he saw from the top of a Stndents should be assured that the psmetice of redeeming spar; moments of time by sketching whatever “is thrown in their way is an invaluable cue. T.ose wriso adopt it will be sure (0 to reward- -ed by oftén finding memorundy so made of far greater interest than they had © imagined, and it will correct the habit, * . always fatal to originality, of going to natmye for things only that resemble _ what they have seen in art. Among the . dmewings by Raphael collected by Sir Thomas Lawrence were many evidently t _of what chance presented to him. One in particular was singularly elegant, of three or four young men in the dress of ‘his time siting at a table, and their at- titudes but very slightly varied—an ac- _ cidental group in all probability of his a woot Michael Angelo we mest with very many attitudes that bear the stamp of being adopted almost im- ‘mediately from nature, and indeed most of the noble rangd of his prophets anfi _&ibyls have this look. A subject bappily . aopted from nature should not deprive the painter of the credit due to inven tion, for indeed the mere facuity of in- venting an incident is far more common . than the nice and quick perception of that in natore which is fitted to the pur- poses of art, and which ordinary ole servers Would pass by or reject perhaps as trifling or vnwerthy. Barns turned mp a mouse with his plow and was beard to say by a man who was at work with him, “i'll make that mouse im: mortal.’’ And he kept his word. —Lon- SI yas © The Widely Distended Skirt. *. Qur prayers bave been answered! The heavy, widely distended skirts will very moon be a thing of the past. They are n abomination and ought never to have een allowed to become fashionable. yy. it would take four hands to ma- ipulate the folds in such a way as to “keep the skirt out of the dust, and when # woman tries to accomplish the task fh two ber gown in soon forgotten in her craniped fingers and she gives it up in despair, How anything so totally un- #it to be worn in the street ever became: a fashion iis a mystery to every ong, ex- cept, perhaps, thoso who manufacture the haircloth. But physicians have de- “nounced the heavy linings as injurious to health, and this, with the good sense of long suffering and heroic women,’ who have patiently tried to endure the burden for fashion’s sake, has brought _ ‘about a-decided reaction against them, ‘and the heavy skirt must go.—Philedel- " phig Times. ~~ Ta | The girl pianist in the next flat who had sprinted over to eth of the tor-| “ure box for hors at #0 time was going to he married. fhe society columns of the Sunday | papers had given it a two stickful no- The face of the weary man in the pext flat lighted up with joy, but as he looked ont of ‘the window and saw a tired eyed woman wheeling in a peram- _ pulator a fat, husky baby, charged. fall of holler, cow's milk, baby food and : _ uglivess, his face hardened, and he | Dbissed between his clinched teeth, ‘‘Re- “yenge !"’—Minneapolis Journal .' 'Patient—I s’pose, doctor, you make “pot your prescriptious in Latin so that your patients won't know what it is? ~~ Doctor—Possibly. Patient—And you make out your hills in English so that. your. patients will © know what it is? Ja > Doctor— Exactly. — don Auswer. *Why ate you making such a din?’ aiked the bald eagle, who sat in the front row, addressing himself to the crows, who occupied the gallery. : “Qh, caws!”’ replied’ the saucy birds §4 chorus. —Pittsburg -Chronicle-Tele- The United States has all kinds of - climate from that ¢f the Sahara in the sandy deserts of Arizona to that of the Amazon in southern Florida and that. of Greenland in northern Idaho and Montana, ‘Missouri produced, according to the last censns year, 308,807 bushels of rye from 24,288 acres. a ee A | io TOT BI TS A ———— ——— A — ITS FUNDS INSURED. BISHOP HURST AND THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY AT WASHINGTON. The Bishop's Energetic Work— Plans Soon to Be Selected and Work Begun In a Few Weeks The Site Will Be One of the’ Most Beautiful In Washington. Throv;h the persistent and untiring efforts «f Bishop John F. Hurst of Washingion and the energy of an eff: gent building committee, the proposed American university at Washington has now taken tangible form, and within a few weeks ground will be broken for the first of the buildings, which, when erected, will far outrival anything of the kind in the Capital City. The site of the proposed university is on the northwestern heights of Wash- ington and covers more than 90 acres It is in some respects the most desirable location in ¢r near the city. Sitnated along the extension of Massachusetts avenve and half fronting on Nebraska avenue, the building will command a charming view of the city, of the Poto- mao and the surrounding country and the Blue Ridge mountains in the dis- tance. The large extent of territory in- eclnded in the tract slopes gently from the summit, where the buildings are to stand, and is already béing put into condition for athletic purposes. : Every effort is now being made to rnise fonds and bmrry the building work along as fast as possible. By the end of Septémber it is hoped that two buildings at least will be urder way, and with the advent of spring the great university will be pushed rapidly toward completion. At the present time the Hall of His- tory, the Administration building, Ep- worth hall and the library are provided for, and money is rapidly coming in for the other buildings. In fact, Bishop Hurst has now on hand about $800,000, in the near fntare. : : The last gift to the university was made by General J. Watts do Peyster of Tivoli, N. Y., who presented a sufficient sum to insure the erection of the library, ‘which is to be known as ‘‘The General J. Watts do Peyster College of Lan- guages.’’ In front of this building will stand a bronze statue of heroic size, now being made in Paris. nd . An endowment of $100,000 for the College of Languages has been contrib- uted by a New York woman. - It has been intimated that General do Peyster intends to give to the university his valuable collection of books and curios, which represent several generations of collecting. Mrs, Olive Logan, widow of General John A. Logan. has been in- strumental in securing the funds for the Administration building. Prominent architects of New York, Boston, Cleveland, Washington and England have submitted plans for the several buildings already contracted for, but none has been accepted. The New York committee bas passed on a pumber, and the plans are now in the bands of the Washington members. Since the purchasing of the site for the university four years ago, at a cost of $100,000, the land in that vicinity has bad a great boom, and four times that amount has already been offered the trustees for the tract. When the buildings ere completed and the sar- roundings beautified, the university, it is expected, will have the most beauti- ful picce of property in Washington. — New York Times. : ; Have You » Mask? When the new woman gets fairly | under way, it is to be hoped that she will know better than to be snared by such a wreich as the man Holmes, who has married x womenwithout a single ‘twinge of conscience and would have as many more if he could be free again. Unloved, unmarried good men stand appalled at the tendency of the ordinary woman to mate with rascals —8t. Louis Post-Dispatch. : Be not disheartened, then, ye ‘‘un- loved, nnmsirried good men.’ Why mot try taking off your masks and let the ordinary woman see what rascals yon really are’—Louisville Courier-Jommal Little Alfonso to the Pope. : . King Alfonso has answered the letter recently sent him by the pope. He de- seventh satisfied him, and he showed it to his mother the queen regent, who corrected the single error. The ki was chagrined because of the correctiun, but was comforted with the suggestion himself made it. This is said to be the first letter written by the king, who is 9 years old.—-New York Son. © Would Make a Good Wife. The girl who stole ont over her mother's sleeping form to elope with her young man is a wife worth baving. If she could do that, she ought to be able to git out and kindle the fire and get breakfast without waking her sleep- ng spouse. —Springfield (Mo. ) Repub- can. : iad Cucumber by the Yard. A cucumber 31 feet long is growing on a vine at Carleton, Mich. The peo- ple thereabouts are going to buy it and send it to Agitator Debs, presumably to preserve asu reminder when he gets out. : Peace In Their Yards. The kaiser and Queen Victoria have become friends, and it is likely to be geveral days before either is again heard singing, !* You shan’t play in my yard.’ —Chicago Post. An Aspersica on Our Fishermen. Thera are as good fish. in the sea as | ever have been caught, but the best fish stories, it is feared; have all been told. —Chicago Tribune. : ; ——————r—- ens He'll Be Remembered. John Dunn, who has jnst died as a dren behind him. iy | mound about 8G feet higher than the | oolumns DOW remain standing. The Chiness officehciders, be kept three- which he expects to swell to $1,000,000 | ‘they are 8 years old, are consigned to | © ‘ding day, all having been arranged for BP per befitting their new estate. Bhen the } 1505t Conhied the receipts, and Row, ‘their heads almost touch the ground | This they do three or four times and are rean’s life, for he then attains man’s old he may be, he is treated as a boy, | ular Science Monthly. stroyed six drafts of tbe letter, but the | that his holiness might suppose the king |. “being Captain Jobuson of last year's! help him keep cool in prison and to! - | ganized an equal suffrage club at Boise Zalu chief, leaves 70 coffee colored chil- ed Stang tT pop a. BAALBEC'S RUINS. They Are the Grandest Momuments of the | Fuist Tu Em rien | SIR ROBEHT HART, WHO CONTROLS The ruins of Baalbee, the ancient | : —. metropolis of Syria, especially those on } HER FINANCES. the *‘platforin’’ where the tepiples stood, are the grasdest in the orient. The platform referred to avove and epor which the largest of the fanvons Baalr<e temples were erected is an artificial ror About 8,000 Officials —How He Cam to Gef the Position — A Man Alwoluiely Honest and Fearless, : : When the first Chinese loan for the inder-aity of Japan was offered, it was pot.ced thet the. Jonn was guaranteed by “Hart, L (3. C.”' As the entire amcont | was for £15,000,000, and $15,600,000 js a very bg sum for any man tobe thie to gnorantse, there has been some eyri- surroanding plain, which gave room for immense vanits under the gazante fractures which in apcient times Rraced the * wonderful city of the east.” “A good idea of the immensity of these ruined temp! 5s nay be gained when it is known that there are several stones in what remains of their four "o- exit #5 to the gnarantor’s perscmality. : tions which are’ 6 ‘at long, 15 feet | “Har, L G C.."" means a Bellast wide and 13 fect thick, and what is | Irishman ‘chown all over the earth as #till mere remarkable some of these the most influer tial man in the ori; | giant blocks of limestone were raised to | He is in charge f tho Chinese customs, | a height of 20 feet from the ground. | with the title «4 inspector general of Three temples formerly stood upon the Customs, :rhict be economically ruts attificial platform—the Temple of the [down into "“L ¢. C.”’ This poriticti be Sun, the Temple of Jupiter and the | had held since 1359. Before that year great circalir temple. The first was 290 | the cnstons sy: em of China was just feet lomg by 160 broad and was sor. | one big stéal Ostenpibly it was urder rounded by Corinthian columns of ovo 5. | the saperirision of a great noble, who ite 75 feet highand Tfeet 2. 1 Was suppeeed to turn into the Chinese diameter. Rix only of thess .._. treasury the ent ve receipts. Like most rains of the Temple of Jupiter stand on {fourths of ths receipts for himself. a portion of the artificial mound some | Abeut 1858 thee wis a war between 1 feet lovet than that spon which | England and China. in which China got those of the Temple of the Sun ave now | the worst ‘of it. In the treaty that fol- scattered about. Its dimensions were | lowed China agreed to pay tho cost of | originally 130 by 120. The &rcular | England's war. . ; rain, almost as imposing as either of i The imperial customs, China's chief the two whose dimensions are given jsource of revenue, were pledged to se- abawe, is supposed to have Leen the | cure the dsht. A young Irishman naped chief seat of the enn worshipers of very | Hurt wis England's representative and ancient times. The gigantic blocks of | iss place in charge of the Chinese ras- stame which contributed toward forming ! toms burean, charged with sening that the graceful outlines of this ance most '2'] the duties collected were turned into famous. circular temple were 8c scatter- "2 Honghong bank. The entine amoans. ed about by the earthquakes of §22, 975 | ¢ ' the indemnity was ecllected so mimch and 1759 that its dimensions in feet | « icker than ‘either nation had expected cannot be accurately given. These three | + it Mr. Hart was called upon tO ex- femples and the platform upon which © 9D. His terse explanation was: ‘‘ne- they were ¢rected were once surrounded .rd of the duties éollected never iach by a wall which was » wonder within | '!g imperial treasury. - They are the itself, many of the separate Llocks which 1+ R18 of, the oficials who have been in formed it being 30 feet long, 15 feet ¢ ge of the customs.” wide and 13 feet thick "'—8t. Louis Re- public. | and § Hart : : emperar, ost as Was re- MARRIAGE IN KOREA. —_ his own country he sent for . and asked him to take charge of the : _nese customs andl do for China what Korean girls, according to Mr. H. 8. | © Joa jost hewn oiag ft Sogitad | Raunderson, after enjoying freedom Gill |. 0 He sid: “1 will under- the w 's quarters, where five 85? this work upon three conditions in seclusion till they are marri ey 16 Ti + first is that I shall bave absolute or 17 years. After marriage the woman | 3° “0717 OVE the entire system, and io allowed to seo 20 man bat her boo | 20 a ee , on ae 1? ; taught that it 3 undignified for them to | '0¢_30Y ariers. I must also haw the enter the women's part of the house. | FIRS to employ my oun subordinates They never seo their brides till thewed- | 320%, Bireior Giabag WHoster ! them. often ‘bride { This was rather & large order, but the : When both beid wl g "| emperor «f China agreed to it, and : | Hart was placed in control The very " bride and bridegroom invi { first year’s work with the old s:aff gave Hie The | ily wal friends Ive an increasy of 20 per cent in the cusper- them in dressing their hair in the man- | or’s revenues. The succeeding yea al jdegroom mounts 4 | after 35 yrars.of benevolent despoiion, Dm GUIs 3 white fomy: wiieh| the mst powezinl man iw Cin 2 is the on either side sapport the rider in his bitie Belfust Irishuaan, who 1d ais Giate saddle. Thus he proceeds to the bride's Jord sud ruler of 24 trecly pats and house, accompanied by his relatives. At! 8,000 officials. Pr dably no mas bv. their destination they find a pavilion | PF knows the Chinese charter and erected in the courtyard of the house. in | the Chinese ways 8s well as Sir Robert ‘which the bride and her selstives are Hart, I G. C. When the great Chipese awaiting their arrival. A goose (the | comneil of state geis ‘stack, as i fre- | Korean symbol of fidelity), which the quently does, Hart is called in, and it | bridegrooin brings with him, is then ris his pride that be has alwars pulled | produced. : : | the evuncil cat of these troubles. ~~ The bride, who has to cover her face | Absclote boner has been the keynote with her long sleeves, and the bride- Of Hart Xie 3 uuifdial who wegid : : .y | Bot steal | wonid not was & man groom then bow to each other until known in China before Hart went there. For years after Sir Robert enter- then man wife: A Jovi no § {ed the Chimese service the vionroy kept passed a Ne then oy = tab cn hiza, bat it was soon found that taken off to the women's apartments of | hs peededd no watching, his accounts ber husband's home, where she is looked | ate eerTent jos penny, ahd sow be 3 after by her mother ahd mother-in-la=, | absolutely trusted. Thirty-five . years while the groom entertains his §:_ mds. | EI has taugst the Shien he ‘Husband mast maintain Lis wi | eials that there is ome man in the wor The 4 main Lis wife! ve will not steal and can neither be properly and treat her with respect. | : : Et Marriage is the great event in a Ko- IeigHiened) Bu bribed. —Chicago Cipans estate. Before marriage, no matter how | ee ) A remarkable family of big boys met and has to maintain s deferential atti- | at their old home in Tionesta, fa, a tude toward the married men, even few days agp, a ar many ‘years of sep though they be only half his age: —Pop- aration. The sh test of the young men : : |i juss 6 feet tal: in his stocking feet. A | Two of the brothers are 8 feet 5 inches Wellesley’'s “Coach.” _ | tall, two others 8 feet 3 inches, and the Miss Lacile Eaton Hill is a young wo- | remaining ome 6 feet 2 incies The man who has carved a niche for herself ' mother aad father of the boys, Mr. and in quite an unusual place. She is| Mrs. Harmoa Coleman, are of only aver- ‘coach’ to the Wellesley boating crew. | age height. —New York Sun. She studies ‘strokes’ scientificially and | m— it is confidently believed by enthusiastic | Wikeat Crop of the World. Wellesleyians that the Gorell crew | The Himgarian government has issued ‘wonld have done well to study the art’ its annual statement concerning the of rowing under her. She was at Pough- ! wheat crop of the world. The statment keepsie while the crews were im train- | is based om consular and other cfficial ing there, and she also went to New {reports The ‘estimated production of London to study her specialty. She | Wheat hmporting countries is 749,423,- comes of a rowing family, her cousin | ¢% bashels; of exporting countries, 1,551,701,000. The total estimated pro- duction is 232,000,000 bushels below that of the amended estimates of 1894. Yale crew. She has charge of all the gymnastic work at Wellesley, : Cotton as Is Cotten. : Here is Georgia cotton that; is cotton: Near the flourishing city of Cordele a picnic purty composed of several thou- sand pecple, old and young. recently as- sembled in a cotton field and nuinerous swings for the children were put up on the lower limbs of the cotton stilks — Atlanta Constitution. : : : Easy. : " “Nirvans,'’ said the business man’s “wife, who has taken to occult subjects, “tis a place where we ree, feel and hear nothing. How to reach this peaceful condition is the great question.’ “Huh !"’ replied her husband, *‘if you had been in business as long as I have, you would know that it's easy.’ “‘How would you go about it?’ : “I'd simply quit advertising.”'— Washi agton Star. A Hint Others May Take. Queen Victoria should paste in a scrapbook the speeches she delivers at the opinipg of parliament and read them now and then. - She would be sar- prised sit their terseness and brevity. — Chicago Tribane, : : Boise City's Club. Mrs. Emma Smith De Voe lately or- City, with the chief justice's wife as Soria 5 president, and the wife of the con- gressman elect as secretary. Many wom- en of high moral and social standing are members, Trilby Has Reached Kansas. ' pal, tho up to date girl of that state {now says ‘My Trilby is Svengilized”’ CHINA'S IRISH RULER | Fle Is Abssiute Ruler of 24 Ports end | They are important in that they set forth the law of seif-d¢fensa, i also by Beard, after the Iatier had objectionable in point of law on several Comewhat patgrally, this answer sted gloom in the mind of the Chi- |! | according to one view of the evilense, of him. | nis life or to ds him great bodily harm, | believe, was necessary to save his owm i bil ” and occasion: According to a veracious Kansus jour- | i$ i ia compe i sp an & Man Not Obliged to Betrest When About As erm ) 16 Be Attacked on His Own Promises. i Comes Mech Gout Spert. . to eight years imprisonment for man- . slanghter in Jodge Parker's court fog kyrie that it hasn The the little ite of s Britisher Spruce IV the judgment below was sanounesd by *! ter : Mr. Justice Harlan, who bas filed the tae : ’ views of the court in fall with the clerk ‘clob’s international challenge cup for : : small raters. Sie Te ‘From more than ose point of view the Western District of Arkansas Beard had three brothers-in law young men, who came to his house in his ab-| : : ; de sence with the expressed détérmiuation Daks cup, is » visit of vital importance of driving sway a cow, ewnership of © yachsmen. The race itnélf willbe whicis was claimed by one of them and | Marked by many festarvs atierly ateent warned them not to come. While they true bine Corinthiszi sport fo start were disputing with Mrs Beard her Wifi—one man #0 run doe bost, and be i husband returned home. One of the Si smatenr in the best and highust sense brothers, Will Jones, advanced upon Of the word Beard, who bad 2 gun in his hands, and | made a motion ss if to draw a revolver: from his y<<ket, which he bad grasped in his hand. Beard struck Mim over the head, inflicting a wound from which be died. On the trial Judge Parker, in. structed the jury in regard to the lawof pelf-defense, to the effect that Beard was compelled by that law to aveid danger ot Jones bands by getting out of the way if be could, and that the only place the wheres he need not retreat further we This charge, Justice Harlan says, wal OWNEY’S GREAT TRIP. “The Court. several times in itscharge, ' . Paitut Dog Io Making - Voy rised or sugzested the inquiry whether oo. the postal clerk's famous dog, Beard was in the lawful pursait of his _. 0 10d ovr the United States, fight to do— when, after returning home _ 0 eo Poooma Early in Joly in’ the afternoon. he went from his (ney went to Tacoma and made s trip dwelling honse Da part of his premises’ : : | near the orchard fence, just outside of to Alaska Returning, be inspected a whieh his wife and the Jones twnthers ane Seshard go od in a dispute—the formes soemiad Yery Rutercuttd I i ——E— to prevent the cow frou | Fon SOO nd the world = away, the later trying t® He will go to Hi ron the North- ; the premises. Was be 888... Pacific steamer Victoria an the | . | he had the legal right 10 d8, ,¢ Captain John Panton. © The capiain : eepiing within kis own premises oj} put him aboard sa English mail and near his dwelling. he joined his wife, roamer bound for London via India and who was in dispnte with others, one of Gy - \ whom, as he had been informed, had al 4 back to Tacoma ; ready threatens:l to take the cow away | * Cruney is now 15 years old. He start- or kill him? We hive no hesitation iB. od traveling many years sgo. - A postal : answering this question = the fire clerk tock a fancy to him and pot about : uv. =: ihismecka tag bearing the : “Ia our opinion thacpurt below errell “Be kind to Owney. Since he has in holding that the accused, whileon M8, traveled with the postal clerks. Jo is i EC ee kf os oni cet eh war a " lax avi ye a ot i amt it vy atually ob wreriesding. bg $l had threatened to kill thedefendant, and; : in execution of that purpose had armed = Wants Them Both himself with a deadly weapon. with that | concealed upon his person went fo the defendant's premises, despite warming of the latter to keep away, : 2k by word and act indicated his te say the other day: “Jim Corbett will attuck the accused. The defendant was’ be whipped sure. He int any greater where he had the right to be when the’ pugilist than Napoiec was. » soldie deceased advanced upon him in a threat. | and he met his Waterloo because hed. ening manner and with a deadly weapon; | vorced Josephine. Dallas will be his and if the accused did mot provoke the Waterlomge™ = = assault and had at the time reasonable “But.” I arged, “Fitwimmons was grounds to believe and I good £4ith De | divorced by Liz wife aad married a Heved that the deceased intended to take | younger and handsome: woman. he was mot chiized to refreat, mor to was the lady's reply. .—Macon in New | consider whether he could safely retreat, { York Jowmal Eat was entitled to stand hisground and | : meet any attack made upon him witha | deadly weapon in such way and with | such force as, unler all the circame | Woman, as stances, he at fhe inoment honestly bee the fran door, “and so mk 15 lieved, and had ressonable grounds te Jook in on the legislature and kill a fev life or to protect “Do bodily injury... ‘As the procesdings were not com ducted in aceorlance with these prime! ciples, the julrment must be nsversed, thought of homer and the cate remanded. with directions | that new china set; anc yosterday, whe™ to grant & mew triil” {be gave the baby green apples; au. § himself from gresd A Cat Tha: Craves Approval. | biscuits. Oh, I'm alvrays thinking of Mra Mnggzins is a very good muses him——poor souli™—Atianta Qonstity: ly she will catch a grea$ Yom. : : : big rat out in the barn. Of this feat she is always very roomd and invariably! 5 Buzsards Bay fisherman wan to beens the rat after itis dend to the pat the label “Gray Gables Oysters” on ouse, where every member of the fal | 1s next crop of bivalves now growin: ily must see it and praise and pet bef | & (hose shores, but he is in doubt abou: for being such a good, UTave oak. The his privilege in the muster, Be wonder first time this occurred one of the MeM= | jo the president has copyrighted the titi bers of the family took the rat ap ou S| 0 hig orl , Yor : swe shovel aml threw 1t over the back fence, and if he would object; all other reason... : bat in a very few moments Mrs Muge! oiqa just “‘because.’ The scheme Sn — was i$ thrown ove fence. Dut OVEY | boy fishermen, who se wo 3 in the: time it was brought back. | Jabel for a frademari -- Baltimore Amer- - Atlast the two compromised matters j.., trier i ae by allowing the rat to remiin just out- : side the back door by the side of the : Lacky Mine Pair. Sra step. There it stayed all day until evem-| Miss Virginia Fair scoms to be enta- ing. when it was found ont why Mrs. tled to a good position on the front Muggins objected to having it throwa, She has made a bicycle record AWAY. ; x The father had been home only a few minutes when the cat waized proudly into the sifting room with her head aloft and the big rat dangling from hex mouth. She went up to the man and laid the rat at his feet, looked up in his’ face and waited to be careswed and praised. After she received the desired the r § attention she allowed the rat to be car | Washington with a fend of $50,000 and ried away and cared nothing more about | have it occupied hy Mr. ‘Heneburg, nov isn —Cincinnati Tribune. fof Oxford, Eagland -—New York Jour- Just to Start a Breese, Jame—Henry, what wonll you de it’ you should go to the postoffien buy a Be stamp, ask the man to stick it om few; i you, and he refused. : Henry (whois very serions)—What And still ber plea Wii this: would I do? Stick it on myself. 14bal) uot wake hi: with ing! Jane—I1 should stick it on the letter. —Tit-Bita. ) : 1% was ber wont when, tired of play, i : . Sipper- -What, Topey, why iso deject- od? : : For stil! be smiles ix dreams of blins, “How should 1 walks him with a kiss?” i - | when ter foot is asleep : The amount of wealth invested in our | . — manufactures iz increasing in a larger Right You Are. proportion than that put into any other form of production Boston Herald. Cleatly 1875 is an ‘ear of corn.— | So did his mother say, and when ! God whispered bis sweet will She only moaned, “ie sleeps!’ and Kneeling. she kissd him still Topey— The doctor won't sllow me te | drink any wine. = : Sipper—Well, you idiot, why dem't, And weephig, murmured only this: : at ni Zt 1m] cannot walks him with a Kiss!” 7 you gt Sahat doctor. St. Louis Globe , ~Prask L. Stanton in Atlanta Constivution. — — from the America’s caprontests. Fe will “Then I hope he'll be whipped, $00, | Wednesday, when he put sugar in tha ginshad it back again: again and AZAR | opens up limitless possibilit.es for the a fo the Cathclic university at . Mie TR
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers